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Featured researches published by David Le Sage.


Science | 2014

Solar nebula magnetic fields recorded in the Semarkona meteorite

Roger R. Fu; Benjamin P. Weiss; Eduardo A. Lima; Richard J. Harrison; Xue-Ning Bai; Steven J. Desch; Denton S. Ebel; Clément Suavet; Huapei Wang; David R. Glenn; David Le Sage; Takeshi Kasama; Ronald L. Walsworth; Aaron T. Kuan

Magnetic fields are proposed to have played a critical role in some of the most enigmatic processes of planetary formation by mediating the rapid accretion of disk material onto the central star and the formation of the first solids. However, there have been no experimental constraints on the intensity of these fields. Here we show that dusty olivine-bearing chondrules from the Semarkona meteorite were magnetized in a nebular field of 54 ± 21 microteslas. This intensity supports chondrule formation by nebular shocks or planetesimal collisions rather than by electric currents, the x-wind, or other mechanisms near the Sun. This implies that background magnetic fields in the terrestrial planet-forming region were likely 5 to 54 microteslas, which is sufficient to account for measured rates of mass and angular momentum transport in protoplanetary disks. Magnetic field strength in the early solar system is recorded in chondrules within a meteorite born of the asteroid Vesta. Magnetic moments in planetary history To know the magnetic history of the solar nebula in the age of planet formation, researchers turn to the most primitive meteorites. Samples such as the Semarkona chondrite are composed partly of chondrules, which reflect the strength of the ambient magnetic field when this material was last molten. Fu et al. used a SQUID microscope to measure the remnant magnetization in a section of Semarkona. The findings reveal secrets about what goes on inside protoplanetary disks. Science, this issue p. 1089


PLOS Genetics | 2015

A Genetic Strategy for Probing the Functional Diversity of Magnetosome Formation

Lilah Rahn-Lee; Meghan E. Byrne; Manjing Zhang; David Le Sage; David R. Glenn; Timothy Milbourne; Ronald L. Walsworth; Hojatollah Vali; Arash Komeili

Model genetic systems are invaluable, but limit us to understanding only a few organisms in detail, missing the variations in biological processes that are performed by related organisms. One such diverse process is the formation of magnetosome organelles by magnetotactic bacteria. Studies of model magnetotactic α-proteobacteria have demonstrated that magnetosomes are cubo-octahedral magnetite crystals that are synthesized within pre-existing membrane compartments derived from the inner membrane and orchestrated by a specific set of genes encoded within a genomic island. However, this model cannot explain all magnetosome formation, which is phenotypically and genetically diverse. For example, Desulfovibrio magneticus RS-1, a δ-proteobacterium for which we lack genetic tools, produces tooth-shaped magnetite crystals that may or may not be encased by a membrane with a magnetosome gene island that diverges significantly from those of the α-proteobacteria. To probe the functional diversity of magnetosome formation, we used modern sequencing technology to identify hits in RS-1 mutated with UV or chemical mutagens. We isolated and characterized mutant alleles of 10 magnetosome genes in RS-1, 7 of which are not found in the α-proteobacterial models. These findings have implications for our understanding of magnetosome formation in general and demonstrate the feasibility of applying a modern genetic approach to an organism for which classic genetic tools are not available.


Mrs Bulletin | 2013

Nanoscale magnetometry with NV centers in diamond

Sungkun Hong; Michael Grinolds; Linh Pham; David Le Sage; Lan Luan; Ronald L. Walsworth; Amir Yacoby


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Dressed-State Resonant Coupling between Bright and Dark Spins in Diamond

Chinmay Belthangady; Nir Bar-Gill; Linh Pham; Ken Arai; David Le Sage; Paola Cappellaro; Ronald L. Walsworth


Biophysical Journal | 2013

Wide-Field Magnetic Imaging using Nitrogen-Vacancy Color Centers in Diamond

Keigo Arai; David Le Sage; Stephen DeVience; David R. Glenn; Linh Pham; Lilah Rahn-Lee; Mikhail D. Lukin; Amir Yacoby; Arash Komeili; Ronald L. Walsworth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Optimizing the sensitivity of an NV-diamond magnetometer

Matthew Turner; David Le Sage; Ronald L. Walsworth


Biophysical Journal | 2014

Optical Magnetic Imaging with Nitrogen-Vacancy Centers in Diamond

Keigo Arai; Chinmay Belthangady; Huiliang Zhang; Stephen DeVience; David Le Sage; David R. Glenn; Linh Pham; Lilah Rahn-Lee; Mikhail D. Lukin; Amir Yacoby; Arash Komeili; Ronald L. Walsworth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Non-classical spin baths in diamond

Linh Pham; Nir Bar-Gill; Chinmay Belthangady; Keigo Arai; David Le Sage; Stephen DeVience; Ronald L. Walsworth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

Room-temperature solid-state quantum memory using pairs of nuclear spins in diamond

Nir Bar-Gill; Stephen DeVience; David Le Sage; Chinmay Belthangady; Linh Pham; Ronald L. Walsworth


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

Applications of Nuclear Spin Singlet States in Liquids and Solids

Stephen DeVience; Nir Bar-Gill; David Le Sage; Chinmay Belthangady; Linh Pham; Matthew S. Rosen; Ronald L. Walsworth

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Nir Bar-Gill

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Paola Cappellaro

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Keigo Arai

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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David Glenn

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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